Techno Music

Diehard techno American fans would have you believe. When techno got popular was when it came back to the United States and was a fixture in the rave parties of that era. Thanks to this movement back and forth across the Atlantic, techno was labeled as being European with its roots in Detroit being forgotten. However, if you listen to the music, it will tell you where it came from.

What is Techno?
Techno is electronic dance music and it uses multitrack mixers, samplers, drum machines and computers. It’s the music that allowed DJs to let their innovative skills be pushed to the extreme. The music is based on the Eurosynthesizer but it has within it shades of African rhythms, funk, jazz and electro. The music tries to conjure up a vision of the future and ‘Future Shock’ comes to mind when you listen to it and get lost in it. From techno came a lot of other genres like hard house, drum and bass and trance.

What techno does to a person is to connect with the body and make it move. There is an invisible connection that it makes with a person’s consciousness and from then on, it’s mechanized music seducing a human soul, making it dance to its rhythm and beat.

The derivative forms of techno music are trance, IDM, hardcore and acid house. The subgenres of techno music are ambient, acid, wonky, minimal and industrial music. The fusion genres that are associated with techno music are ghettotech, microhouse, tech house, and techstep and tech trance.

The Techno Music People:
Detroit techno sound’s template was developed primarily by four unique individuals, Kevin Saunderson, Juan Atkins, Eddie Fowlkes and Derrick May, all of which attended Belleville High together which was near Detroit, Michigan. By the end of the eighties, the four individuals had separated under different guises.

Above all else, if you are a techno music fan and you are curious to learn about techno music, one may want to learn about the techno music history. All of this information will help you to see where the music genre originated and what it has evolved into today. Just like in any other music genre, techno music experiences changes as well as each second, minute and hour passes to bring forth a new day.

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